

Ventura. Product’s launch date is April 20 – 4/20, 4:20, 420: Get it? Get it?
Ex-governor officially a pusher — of edibles, that is
COLUMBIA HEIGHTS, Minn. — Former Governor Jesse Ventura announced online that he’s bringing out a national brand of cannabis products. This, he said, is in with partnership with Retro Bakery, a cannabis production house in the first-ring north Minneapolis suburb of Columbia Heights. He says the products will promoted as from Jesse Ventura Farms. a Ventura age 72, has long championed marijuana as a recreational drug. Now in retirement, he’s cashing in. Beginning April 20 he will have gift cards available online. ‘Why April 20?” you ask. It’s code. Ask any pothead. The cards range from $100 to $1,000, each with add-on incentives. With the $1,000 card you receive a one-on-one rub-shoulders audience with Ventura, a signed rolling tray, a hat, an enamel pin, a poster, free entry to all Retro Bakery hangouts, and 10% cash back for life on purchases.

In Columbia Heights. In strip mall t 4110 Central Avenue Northeast #103.
Verbatim
Ventura: “I can’t tell you how truly amazing this feels. To finally be able to legally share with you, products from a plant that has had such an amazing impact on my life. Not to mention the historical significance of being the first U.S. governor to officially put his name on a cannabis brand. Each step brings us closer to finally ending this tragic and dangerous war on drugs.”
Ventura profile
Jesse Ventura, a folk hero as a wrestling performer, ode a crest of youthful enthusiasm to be elected Minnesota’s governor in 1998. It was a rocky four years in office, and he chose nt to seek reelection. Earlier Ventura had been a highly rated Twin Citi es radio talk-show host and a small-town mayor. For the governorship he ran as a Reform Party candidate — the party’s only candidate to ever win a major office. In recent years Ventura has been retrement in Los Cabos in the Pacific interiorof Mexico. He summers in suburban White Bear Lake back in Minnesota. Last year he joined Governor Tim Walz at the Capitol for the sugning relaxed marijuana regulations into law.

In his wrestling heyday. About 1982. On cable television from what then was called the World Wrestling Federation. Kids loved the showmanship.